Sunday, 26 May 2013

15 Second Review: Banana Motherf***er

Banana Motherfucker
is every bit as silly as the title suggests. That is not to say there is no
method in the madness. In the first instance, the ludicrous B-Movie title and
content plays into and augments current trends towards nostalgic,
neo-grindhouse themes. What the filmmakers achieve within that framework is
impressive. The editing is such that the fruit seems genuinely menacing at
times. The filmmakers take advantage of the human willingness to anthropomorphise
and imbue inert objects with agency. Of course, as the title suggests, this is
all treated with an overt sense of silliness. Over-exaggeration is the order of
the day, and the idea that fruit can come alive is matched by the actors’
hysterical over-acting.

This combination of ridiculousness and retro-horror pastiche
means Banana Motherfucker is equal
parts appropriation, revision, and mockery. Unlike the cannibal films Banana Motherfucker draws upon, the
jungle itself comes alive here. This move is shrewd, allowing the filmmakers to
bypass and lampoon the offensive racial stereotypes that were so often drawn
upon by its 1970s predecessors.

If you want a copy, you can buy the DVD for only 5EUR from http://www.clonespt.com/index.htmlThe DVD features some deleted scenes –
the microwave sequence is possibly funnier than anything in the main feature.